delivered the opinion of the court;
The Chicago Housing Authority (defendant) filed a motion to strike and dismiss the second amended complaint filed by Alberta Smith (plaintiff), as administrator of the estate of Robert Lee Hatcher, in her action under the Illinois Wrongful Death Act. The cause was dismissed with prejudice and plaintiff appeals.
Plaintiff’s second amended complaint contained the following pertinent allegations. On August 7, 1972, defendant owned and operated a public housing project in Chicago. Defendant rented out apartments in the project for residential purposes. Plaintiff’s decedent, Robert Lee Hateher, lived with his family as a tenant in one of these apartments. The housing project was the locale of numerous acts of violence, including shooting incidents and gang warfare. Defendant knew, or in the exercise of due care would have known, of such incidents.
On August 7, 1972, as decedent was entering the building, in which he lived, he was shot and killed by a person upon the premises. At that same time, plaintiff’s decedent and his heirs at law were in the exercise of ordinary care. Defendant was under a duty to control, operate and maintain its premises in such a manner as not to injure its tenants. Defendant foresaw or should have foreseen the occurrence which killed decedent.
The pleading further alleged that defendant carelessly and negligently operated and maintained its premises, failed to provide adequate or any security for its premises, failed to provide its tenants with safe entryways in and about the premises, and furnished the premises, if at all, with inadequate security measures. The cost to defendant of providing adequate safety measures was slight, considering the likelihood of injury to its tenants. The defendant was in the best position to deal with and absorb the costs of the burden of safeguarding the premises. As a direct and proximate result, plaintiff’s decedent was shot and died.
Defendant’s motion to dismiss alleged that plaintiff’s second amended complaint failed to state a cause of action; the complaint alleged no legal duty on the part of a landlord which would provide a basis for liability for tire death of decedent; the complaint failed to state any relationship to the Chicago Housing Authority of the person who shot decedent; and there is no duty in Illinois to hire and provide guards or watchmen to protect persons on the premises on a regular and continuing basis.
In due course, the trial court granted defendant’s motion and dismissed plaintiff’s cause with prejudice, citing Trice v. Chicago Housing Authority,
The single issue raised and argued by both parties in this court is whether the second amended complaint states a cause of action or is “substantially insufficient in law * * Ill. Rev. Stat. 1973, ch. 110, par. 45(1).
The Practice Act provision that pleadings be “liberally construed with a view to doing substantial justice * * *” (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1973, ch. 110, par. 33(3)) will not avail to sustain a complaint which wholly fails to state a cause of action. (Yelkovanoglu v. Gordon,
To state a cause of action for negligence, the complaint must allege the breach of a duty owed by defendant to plaintiff. (Boyd v. Racine Currency Exchange, Inc.,
Plaintiff’s fundamental contention is that defendant, as a landlord, has a duty to protect its tenants against criminal acts of third parties which occur on the premises.. Plaintiff discusses the issue of causation at some length. However, before that issue can be considered, it is necessary to answer the dispositive question of tire existence of a legal duty owed to plaintiff by defendant.
Plaintiff relies on Neering v. Illinois Central R.R. Co.,
In Mims v. New York Life Insurance Co.,
In Stribling v. Chicago Housing Authority,
Both Mims and Stribling, cited by plaintiff, are distinguishable from the instant case. In Mims, defendant’s employee acted affirmatively in a manner which made it possible for the thief to enter the premises. In Stribling, the defendant, with notice, failed to act in a manner which would reasonably have prevented further thefts in the same, unusual fashion. In addition, in both of these cases tire loss inflicted upon plaintiffs was a direct result of the condition of the leased property itself. In one case we have the existence of two adjacent vacant apartments and in the other the unlocked condition of a door to the apartment. On tire contrary, in the case before us, the loss was inflicted by persons unknown and had no causal or other connection with or relation to the property itself.
The same observation applies to Johnston v. Harris (1972),
Trice v. Chicago Housing Authority,
In our opinion the trial court properly applied Trice to the case at bar. The loss here had no physical or causal connection to the premises themselves. The condition of the premises did not in any manner contribute to the loss inflicted upon plaintiff. Requiring an owner to repair and maintain the property imposes a reasonable and essential social duty. There is no requirement reasonable or otherwise which any court could impose upon property owners which could conceivably prevent occurrences such as described in plaintiff’s complaint. This type of crime springs from complex social and other causes far beyond rectification by any court. To impose liability in the case before us would unjustly place upon defendant as a property owner a legal duty which is impossible of performance.
Judgment affirmed.
BURKE and O’CONNOR, JJ., concur.
